Josef Schuster, head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, told the Welt am Sonntag weekly newspaper that the former concentration camp in Flossenbürg is already considering adding tours in Arabic. “This should be expanded to all such memorials,” Schuster said.

Advertisement

Germany has seen an influx of some one million Arabic-speaking refugees in the past four years.

Schuster also warned against any political deals with the right-wing Alternative for Germany party, which is expected to gain parliamentary seats in local elections in former East German states next month.

With only a few weeks to go before elections in some former east German states, Schuster said that mainstream political parties should shun any parliamentary coalitions with the anti-immigrant, anti-minority AfD party, some of whose representatives have also downplayed or questioned the history of the Holocaust. He warned that the AfD is “closely connected to far-right extremism” but manages to present another image to the public by stirring and feeding off legitimate fears. Any political pact with the AfD would force other participating parties to “always look to the right.”

By agitating against minorities in general, the AfD creates a climate that “ultimately is hostile to Jews as well,” he said.

Schuster also said tougher measures are needed to counter Islamic extremism and right-wing populism.

Though there have been several recent anti-Semitic incidents perpetrated in the name of Islamism in German cities, including attacks on two rabbis, the biggest danger still comes from the right, he said. Statistics have shown that the vast majority of reported anti-Semitic crimes were attributed to far-right perpetrators.